Current:Home > MyCharred homes, blackened earth after Texas town revisited by destructive wildfire 10 years later -Excel Money Vision
Charred homes, blackened earth after Texas town revisited by destructive wildfire 10 years later
View
Date:2025-04-16 06:13:12
FRITCH, Texas. (AP) — The small town of Fritch is again picking through the rubble of a Texas wildfire, a decade after another destructive blaze burned hundreds of homes and left deep scars in the Panhandle community.
Residents in and around Fritch and other rural towns fled for safety Tuesday afternoon as high winds whipped the flames into residential areas and through cattle ranches.
Fritch Mayor Tom Ray said on Wednesday the town’s northern edge was hit by a devastating wildfire in 2014, while this week’s blaze burned mostly to the south of the town, sparing the residents who live in the heart of the community.
“I said, ‘Oh Lord, please don’t come down the middle,’” Ray said.
The mayor estimated up to 50 homes were destroyed near Fritch, with dozens more reportedly consumed by fire in small towns throughout the Panhandle.
The cause of this week’s fires is still unknown but dry, warmer than average conditions combined with high winds caused blazes that sparked to grow exponentially, prompting evacuations across a more than 100 mile (160 kilometer) stretch of small towns and cattle ranches from Fritch east into Oklahoma.
Photos showed homes throughout the area reduced to unrecognizable piles of ash and bricks with charred vehicles and blackened earth.
Cody Benge was a fire captain when a wildfire started about a block from his house on Mother’s Day in 2014 and then tore through Fritch, decimating homes.
Benge, who now lives in Oklahoma, immediately began checking on relatives and friends in Fritch when he heard about this week’s fire.
“I immediately started praying and honestly, it brought back a lot of memories for me and the devastation that I saw,” he said. “I can only imagine what everyone is seeing now.”
Benge battled the 2014 fire for at least 48 hours before he was able to get a break. As in the current fire, a cold front eventually moved over the area and allowed firefighters to gain some control of the blaze.
On Wednesday evening, more than a dozen exhausted-looking volunteer firefighters, many caked with ash and soot, gathered at the Fritch Volunteer Fire Department in the center of town. Residents had dropped off bagged lunches, snacks and bottles of water.
“Today your Fritch Volunteer Fire Department mourns for our community and those around it,” fire officials wrote in a post on Facebook. “We are tired, we are devastated but we will not falter. We will not quit.”
Meghan Mahurin with the Texas A&M Forest Service said they typically rely on heavy equipment to create containment lines around a wildfire, but the fire near Fritch jumped the lines in high winds.
“The wind has just been brutal on us,” she said. “At one point the wind was so high and the flames were so tall that it was just blowing across the highway.”
Lee Quesada, of Fritch, evacuated his residence Tuesday saying the fire got as close as two houses away.
“I haven’t moved so fast since I was like 20,” he said.
His attention then turned to his 83-year-old grandmother Joyce Blankenship, who lived about 21 miles (33 kilometers) away in the town of Stinnett. He posted on a Fritch Facebook community page wondering if anyone knew anything or could check on her.
On Wednesday, he said deputies called his uncle to say they found her remains in her burned home.
“Brings tears to my eyes knowing I’ll never see her again,” Quesada said.
Whether more lives were lost as well as the extent of the damage from the fires wasn’t yet clear on Wednesday, largely because the fires continued to burn and remained uncontained, making complete assessments impossible.
“Damage assessment ... is our next priority, after life safety and stopping the growth of these fires,” Nim Kidd, chief of the Texas Division of Emergency Management, said Wednesday, adding that residents should remain alert as conditions favoring fire growth could return later this week.
The Moore County Sheriff’s Office, which encompasses some of Fritch, posted on Facebook Tuesday night that deputies had helped with evacuations.
“We have seen tragedy today and we have seen miracles,” the post said. “Today was a historic event we hope never happens again. The panhandle needs prayers.”
___
Baumann reported from Bellingham, Washington. AP reporter Jeff Martin contributed from Atlanta.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Roger Corman, Hollywood mentor and ‘King of the Bs,’ dies at 98
- Trump trial turns to sex, bank accounts and power: Highlights from the third week of testimony
- Hilary Duff Gives Candid Look at “Pure Glamour” of Having Newborn Baby Townes
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Can Nelly Korda get record sixth straight win? She's in striking distance entering weekend
- Jill Biden tells Arizona college graduates to tune out people who tell them what they ‘can’t’ do
- The Eagles at the Sphere in Las Vegas? CEO seems to confirm rumors on earnings call
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- 1 of 3 teens charged with killing a Colorado woman while throwing rocks at cars pleads guilty
Ranking
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Horoscopes Today, May 11, 2024
- NYC’s Rikers Island jail gets a kid-friendly visitation room ahead of Mother’s Day
- Are cicadas dangerous? What makes this double brood so special? We asked an expert.
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Local governments struggle to distribute their share of billions from opioid settlements
- Kuwait’s emir dissolves parliament again, amid political gridlock in oil-rich nation
- Connecticut Democrats unanimously nominate U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy for a third term
Recommendation
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
Nebraska Supreme Court upholds woman's murder conviction, life sentence in killing and dismemberment of Tinder date
Sabrina Carpenter Celebrates 25th Birthday With Leonardo DiCaprio Meme Cake
How Blac Chyna Found Angela White Again in Her Transformation Journey
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
Extreme G5 geomagnetic storm reaches Earth, NOAA says, following unusual solar event
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs asks judge to dismiss ‘false’ claim that he, others raped 17-year-old girl
Bears coach Matt Eberflus confirms Caleb Williams as starting quarterback: 'No conversation'